80
80
Jun 18, 2013
06/13
by
FBC
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
the head of the nsa says america is safer because of nsa surveillance. our contributors might --an i and whether they agree. go ahe of him and win fiy thousand dollars. congralations you are our one millionth custom. nobody likes to miss out. that's why ally treats al their customere same. whether you're t first or thehe millionth. if your bank dsn't think you're special anymore, you need an ally ally bank. your money needs an ally. living with hair los that is. losing your hair is no fun a no one wantso be bald, but there is hope. >> getting my ha back was the best thing that ever happened to me. >> i'm happy with the way i look now. i'm very excited about my hair. >> i feel beautiful. iove my hair. >> announcer: hair club fe all-proven hailoss solutions backed by our commitment to satisfacti guaranteed. if you're not 100% satfied with theolution you choose, hair club will apply the more hair at no charge.nsplanten >> and that was the best thing i'vever done. >> it looks good on me. five minutes to geyour free brocochure at no oblatn. it will tellou eve
the head of the nsa says america is safer because of nsa surveillance. our contributors might --an i and whether they agree. go ahe of him and win fiy thousand dollars. congralations you are our one millionth custom. nobody likes to miss out. that's why ally treats al their customere same. whether you're t first or thehe millionth. if your bank dsn't think you're special anymore, you need an ally ally bank. your money needs an ally. living with hair los that is. losing your hair is no fun a no...
73
73
Dec 12, 2013
12/13
by
KCSM
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
some of the people proposing bills to restraint nsa spying. include the very opposite the patriot act james sensenbrenner republican from wisconsin leahy senator from vermont on the other side of chamber and they teamed up to propose very very significant restrictions on nsa spying. i do hope that the usa freedom act that says given the dysfunction visible across congress. that's really the leasing companies joining in the mix earlier this week when is the calculation of capital makes this legislation more likely that a supreme act ice i certainly hope so and that the sec companies abandoned their other issues or that accompanies the bin barry i lied on privacy concerns in yet not been able to secure congressional reforms even around with more to meet their proposals the electronic communications privacy act for instance has been an object of attention of the tech companies for over a year now. this is a bill that hasn't been a lot now that has adapted to thirty years getting on the nsa. while local police and the fbi in every other one forced
some of the people proposing bills to restraint nsa spying. include the very opposite the patriot act james sensenbrenner republican from wisconsin leahy senator from vermont on the other side of chamber and they teamed up to propose very very significant restrictions on nsa spying. i do hope that the usa freedom act that says given the dysfunction visible across congress. that's really the leasing companies joining in the mix earlier this week when is the calculation of capital makes this...
93
93
Jun 19, 2013
06/13
by
FBC
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
the head of the nsa says america is safer because of nsa surveillance. nsa surveillance. our contributors might -- you hurt my feelings, todd. i did? when visa signature asked evybody wh upgraded exriences really mattered... you suggeed luxury service instd of "strength training with patrickillis." ce on todd! flap them chicken wings. [ grunts ] well, i travel a lot and um.. [ male announcer ] at visa signature, every upgradedxpience comes from listening to our cardholders. va signature. your idea of what a card should be. when lou: for more on the president's defense of the nsa surveillance program and the g8 summit i am joined by andrea tn tots and juan williams a great to have you with us. les start with the n. we havheard for better than a week criticism and judgments on the nsa i have not heard t presint to stand up and defend the agency and matt coress and republicans and democrats are being careful. by? >> i think a lot of republicans and democrats were not appropriately brfed on the program to the american to argue people and i am shocked tt charlie rose called f
the head of the nsa says america is safer because of nsa surveillance. nsa surveillance. our contributors might -- you hurt my feelings, todd. i did? when visa signature asked evybody wh upgraded exriences really mattered... you suggeed luxury service instd of "strength training with patrickillis." ce on todd! flap them chicken wings. [ grunts ] well, i travel a lot and um.. [ male announcer ] at visa signature, every upgradedxpience comes from listening to our cardholders. va...
71
71
Oct 30, 2013
10/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
if you just take the 300 compliance officers of nsa alone, let alone the rest of the apparatus of nsa that is devoted to oversight, my staff, dod's staff, the department of justice, the fisa court, the civil liberties and privacy officers, igs, and the amount of time they spend, it is very costly program in terms of both manpower and dollars. i just don't have a figure. >> one last comment, reflection, is there anything either one of you can think of within your authority to do to address civil liberties and privacy issues that you're not doing? >> from my perspective, no. one of the things, and i was just going to have chris add one element if i could on here to your question. >> we'd actually just described a note to ourselves, but at nsa, the annual dollars we spend on this, the 30 million, and we have 300 full-time e qif lance, but what i scribed on the note is it's everybody's job. everyone has a role to play in compliance. we bring our employees in on their first day whether military or civilian, we give them all the oath of office, tell them it's to the constitution, the whole
if you just take the 300 compliance officers of nsa alone, let alone the rest of the apparatus of nsa that is devoted to oversight, my staff, dod's staff, the department of justice, the fisa court, the civil liberties and privacy officers, igs, and the amount of time they spend, it is very costly program in terms of both manpower and dollars. i just don't have a figure. >> one last comment, reflection, is there anything either one of you can think of within your authority to do to address...
101
101
Jun 13, 2013
06/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 101
favorite 0
quote 0
we've had these allegations since the nsa was born. and since guys like james banford started reporting on all the secret things the nsa does. these revelations that periodically shock us about what they do they basically never result in them stopping doing this thing that is shocking us. the programs, even the revealed programs, the leaked programs, they don't go away. they just expand over time. if we're weirded out by the power of the nsa, their power so far is something that only grows. so how does that end? joining us tonight for the interview is james banford, the original and foremost historian of the nsa. his newest book about general keith went on line at wired.com at the top of the show. thanks for being here. >> great to be here again. >> in silent war, this article you published at wired. it seems like you are trying to convey the immense power that keith alexander has that is underappreciated. why do we not understand how powerful he is in the agencies he runs? >> he's the most powerful figure in the history of the united
we've had these allegations since the nsa was born. and since guys like james banford started reporting on all the secret things the nsa does. these revelations that periodically shock us about what they do they basically never result in them stopping doing this thing that is shocking us. the programs, even the revealed programs, the leaked programs, they don't go away. they just expand over time. if we're weirded out by the power of the nsa, their power so far is something that only grows. so...
8,282
8.3K
Oct 3, 2013
10/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 8,282
favorite 0
quote 41
used or shared outside of nsa. despite the difference between willful or not we treat incidents the same. we detect address remediate including removing or purging information from our database is in accordance with the rules and we report. we hold ourselves accountable and keep others informed so they can do the same. nsa's compliance regime at last friday's intelligence committee hearing one thing we have learned an enormous amount about is the cub clients were seizures that nsa uses. they are remarkable. they are detailed. they produce data streams that are extremely telling into my mind are reassuring. we welcome an ongoing discussion about how the public can going forward have increased informatiinformati on about nsa's compliance program. >> lets go into that discussion because both of you have raised concerns that the media reports about the government's surveillance program has been incomplete and inaccurate and misleading or some combination of that. i worry that we are still getting inaccurate and incompl
used or shared outside of nsa. despite the difference between willful or not we treat incidents the same. we detect address remediate including removing or purging information from our database is in accordance with the rules and we report. we hold ourselves accountable and keep others informed so they can do the same. nsa's compliance regime at last friday's intelligence committee hearing one thing we have learned an enormous amount about is the cub clients were seizures that nsa uses. they...
119
119
Nov 2, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 1
to nsa partners. to be perfectly clear, this is not information we collect it on european citizens. it represents information that collected nato allies in defense of our countries and in support of military operations. i understand you correctly, this information was collected external to the country of which it was reported in defense of operations in which nato participates. is that correct? >> that is correct. >> as you study the networks of aboutrld -- let's talk the european union for a second, if i may. is it possible for chinese intelligence services to use networks you would find in any nation in the european union? >> absolutely. >> how about russian intelligence services? networksy use european inside the european union? >> yes. >> how about al qaeda? could they use networks found in the european union to plan execution of operations? >> they could absolutely. it be in the purview of the national security agency to try to prevent those activities if it was targeted at the united states or o
to nsa partners. to be perfectly clear, this is not information we collect it on european citizens. it represents information that collected nato allies in defense of our countries and in support of military operations. i understand you correctly, this information was collected external to the country of which it was reported in defense of operations in which nato participates. is that correct? >> that is correct. >> as you study the networks of aboutrld -- let's talk the european...
65
65
Dec 18, 2013
12/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
wiretapping is not just nsa. police, whichcal it sounds like it was in your case or it if they follow the law, they could argue they have done everything right. wiretapping has been a cornerstone of law enforcement since the invention of the telephone -- telephone. host: if they were doing their job as designed, why couldn't they stop the boston murders? a coordination problem. us had been more positives in september 11. interagency cooperation has gotten better, but there is still some gaps and that was one of them. host: what you make of the headlines of these tech company ceos meeting with the president yesterday and pressing him on spying, saying the public does not trust us, and demanding they have more control over the backbone? people are trying to manipulate the press and public opinion by releasing things that damage the u.s. government and damage u.s. companies. there are people trying to take commercial advantage of this and companies are hurting. this is something the president needs to pay attention
wiretapping is not just nsa. police, whichcal it sounds like it was in your case or it if they follow the law, they could argue they have done everything right. wiretapping has been a cornerstone of law enforcement since the invention of the telephone -- telephone. host: if they were doing their job as designed, why couldn't they stop the boston murders? a coordination problem. us had been more positives in september 11. interagency cooperation has gotten better, but there is still some gaps...
163
163
Jun 24, 2013
06/13
by
FBC
tv
eye 163
favorite 0
quote 0
the nsa has to do with them taking it. we're giving it tohese companies. in some ways that's the way the web works. they need us to trust them with our data, our friends, our photos, but their real business is betraying that trust to advertisers. that's their business model. theyry to hide it sowhat. they're transparent somewhat but they really re on us not noticing. the fact that they had a sideline betraying us the government awell is just one more thing. >> i'm curious about ts because -- by the way, i didn't say at t companies took the information. i said they dis sem nated it various ways across t t web. that is the business model. facebook in particula doesn care what your privacy preferences are. eye going to do what they will. i find that uerly maddening that people are buying that posture almost unquestioned. >> there's a conflict of inrest here. these are the very same types of correlations that you see in prm that facebook and google and others do t better sve you ads. the difference is going to b the false positives. if google makes a mistake,
the nsa has to do with them taking it. we're giving it tohese companies. in some ways that's the way the web works. they need us to trust them with our data, our friends, our photos, but their real business is betraying that trust to advertisers. that's their business model. theyry to hide it sowhat. they're transparent somewhat but they really re on us not noticing. the fact that they had a sideline betraying us the government awell is just one more thing. >> i'm curious about ts because...
6,152
6.2K
Oct 30, 2013
10/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 6,152
favorite 0
quote 38
one key fact we need to keep in mind is that nsa's focus is on foreign threats under fisa nsa does not target target americans in the u.s. and does not target americans anywhere else without a court order. they are to fisa authorities that have been highlighted in the the press prefers the business records provision known as section 215 which allows the government to legally correct what is called metadata a phone number and length of call, not content. no names, no commerce asians, no content. let me be clear. under 215 the nsa cannot listen to anyone's phonecalls. what section 215 does is allow the government to connect the dots. these dots could have been connected to prevent 9/11 and are necessary to prevent the next attack. we could have determined one of the 9/11 attackers for hijackers was in san diego and made a call to an al qaeda number in yemen. i shudder to think what connections will be missed if the program were completely eliminated. keep in mind law enforcement obtains and analyzes these types of records every day to stop organized crime and keep drugs out. we don't wan
one key fact we need to keep in mind is that nsa's focus is on foreign threats under fisa nsa does not target target americans in the u.s. and does not target americans anywhere else without a court order. they are to fisa authorities that have been highlighted in the the press prefers the business records provision known as section 215 which allows the government to legally correct what is called metadata a phone number and length of call, not content. no names, no commerce asians, no content....
65
65
Aug 27, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
i want to go back to the nsa program. you said something important, which is you could vouch for the program that was underway when you were in office. but obviously not being read into the into the program now, it is a different situation. i think everybody in this room would agree barack obama is no dick cheney.[applause] when you have a president who has shown himself to have such a complete disreguard for the rule of law, who has shown himself willing to use the irs to go after political enemies, who has shown himself willing to completely disregard the constitution, to decide i am not going to implement the employer mandate because it is inconvenient for me even though it is the law, who has shown himself frankly completely irresponsible when it comes to protecting americans' privacy, you have a lot of americans out there now, and in light of a lot of news stories we are seeing, that say the nsa made a mistake and they listened to phone calls from washington, d.c., because it has a 202 area code which is similar to t
i want to go back to the nsa program. you said something important, which is you could vouch for the program that was underway when you were in office. but obviously not being read into the into the program now, it is a different situation. i think everybody in this room would agree barack obama is no dick cheney.[applause] when you have a president who has shown himself to have such a complete disreguard for the rule of law, who has shown himself willing to use the irs to go after political...
108
108
Jun 29, 2013
06/13
by
FBC
tv
eye 108
favorite 0
quote 0
what does he need to be effective in t defense of nsa and his own administration? >> anything but transparent but i think after five years with the oh, passty of this administration transparent i the butt of a joke that will be effective in the discourse. he needs to explain much like general alexander did why we need these programs and what the stctural civil liberties protections are in them because the run away freighttrain here is that people who are opposed to the program and saw the issue as a way to relitigate everhing they lost when the patriot act was authorized, have stolenhe narrative here and basically have people thinking that the intelligence community is actively spying on americans. >> i tnk today -- if i'm correct in sensing some higher level of maturity the part of the committee. perhaps it's about to ebb. they of course always have the reinforcing value of e national media given the politics of the matter. but hopefully we'll see more attention paid to the chinese cyber attacks in this country than on trying to take up the timef those who are lea
what does he need to be effective in t defense of nsa and his own administration? >> anything but transparent but i think after five years with the oh, passty of this administration transparent i the butt of a joke that will be effective in the discourse. he needs to explain much like general alexander did why we need these programs and what the stctural civil liberties protections are in them because the run away freighttrain here is that people who are opposed to the program and saw the...
98
98
Oct 17, 2013
10/13
by
KCSM
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
internal documents at the nsa also acknowledge the problem of over collection, noting that nsa databases have been overwhelmed by the mass collection of contact lists loaded with spam. indefensible programs like this, the nsa chief keith alexander has said they are critical counterterrorism tools and ultimately "you need the haystack to find the needle." moving on, those snap chats -- snapchats you're sending maybe be getting viewed, just not by the person you want. snapchat allows users to -- to send photos and videos that automatically self-destruct in a matter of seconds. actually, this multimedia message sticks around a bit longer. it may be available to law enforcement. in a message posted on its website this week, snapchat admitted that it can leave -- it can access media not opened. if they receive a search warrant from law enforcement, and the contents are still on the servers, a federal law called the electronic communication privacy act obliges us to produce snaps to the law enforcement agency. snapchat says it has received about a dozen search warrants requiring them to run on
internal documents at the nsa also acknowledge the problem of over collection, noting that nsa databases have been overwhelmed by the mass collection of contact lists loaded with spam. indefensible programs like this, the nsa chief keith alexander has said they are critical counterterrorism tools and ultimately "you need the haystack to find the needle." moving on, those snap chats -- snapchats you're sending maybe be getting viewed, just not by the person you want. snapchat allows...
100
100
Sep 2, 2013
09/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 100
favorite 0
quote 0
i want to go back to the nsa program. he said something important, which is you could vouch for the program that was underway when you were in office. but obviously not the into the program now, it is a different situation. i think everybody in this room would agree barack obama is no dick cheney. when you have a president who has shown himself to have such a complete the search are for the rule of law, who has shown himself willing to use the irs to go after political enemies, who has shown himself willing to completely disregard the constitution, to decide i am not going to implement the employer mandate because it is inconvenient for me even though it is the law, who has shown himself frankly completely irresponsible when it comes to protecting americans' privacy, you have a lot of americans out there now, and in light of a lot of news stories we are seeing, that say the nsa made a mistake and they listen to phone calls or washington, d.c., because it has a 202 area code which is similar to the country code for egypt.
i want to go back to the nsa program. he said something important, which is you could vouch for the program that was underway when you were in office. but obviously not the into the program now, it is a different situation. i think everybody in this room would agree barack obama is no dick cheney. when you have a president who has shown himself to have such a complete the search are for the rule of law, who has shown himself willing to use the irs to go after political enemies, who has shown...
51
51
Oct 31, 2013
10/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 51
favorite 0
quote 0
nsa contractor edward snowdon. now, bills are in the works in the house and senate that would rein in the spy masters. tonight on inside story we'll take a closer look at the nsa since 9/11, including its mission, it's practices, and it's future. but first this background. >> director keith alexander. >> reporter: demand for intelligence gathering reform are growing on capitol hill over the wake of revelations of massive information gathering. there has been crafted buy partisan legislation to end the collection of puck phone records and the government only focus on foreigners who pose threats. 12 years later the continuing disclosures of nsa surveillance has pushed them to try to rein in the broad sweep of intelligence gathering. appearing on pbs last night. >> there has to be a balance between privacy and security. the nsa and their supporters in the congress have said let's forget about privacy. let's forget about civil liberties. i can't do that. what has made america a different country is our court reports fo
nsa contractor edward snowdon. now, bills are in the works in the house and senate that would rein in the spy masters. tonight on inside story we'll take a closer look at the nsa since 9/11, including its mission, it's practices, and it's future. but first this background. >> director keith alexander. >> reporter: demand for intelligence gathering reform are growing on capitol hill over the wake of revelations of massive information gathering. there has been crafted buy partisan...
183
183
Oct 29, 2013
10/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 183
favorite 0
quote 0
nsa has advantages. but one of the points that mike rogers made in this hearing, and clapper and alexander, in effect, everyone's hands are dirty. they say, yes, we are the target of foreign intelligence operations but also say that we go after not only our allies but -- the leaders of our allies. used the term leadership intentions are both a reasonable and acceptable and valuable target for american intelligence operations. and -- than falling under that umbrella may the phone calls of america i will and others. >> chief national security correspondent jim sciutto. thanks. congressman adam schiff of california sits on the house intelligence committee and stepped out of today's meeting to speak to us live from capitol hill. thanks for joining us. quickly, james clapper was also asked if our allies are guilty of the same sort of thing. here is what he said. >> do you believe that the allies have conducted or at any time, any type of espionage activity against the united states of america, intelligence se
nsa has advantages. but one of the points that mike rogers made in this hearing, and clapper and alexander, in effect, everyone's hands are dirty. they say, yes, we are the target of foreign intelligence operations but also say that we go after not only our allies but -- the leaders of our allies. used the term leadership intentions are both a reasonable and acceptable and valuable target for american intelligence operations. and -- than falling under that umbrella may the phone calls of...
168
168
Aug 1, 2013
08/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 168
favorite 0
quote 0
let's go back to march when senator ron wyden question james clapper about the nsa. >> does the nsa collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of americans? >> no, sir. not. does >> not wittingly. there are cases where they could inadvertently perhaps collect, but not wittingly. >> that is what clapper said about the nsa in march. spencer ackerman, we have come a long way, or have we? where is this going right now? >> let's just back up. the reason why ron wyden even asked that question in public hearing in the first place was to go back to keep alexander, general alexander at a different hacker conference last year was asked that question in different form and he said it was hogwash, that it was simply no truth to the idea that the nsa was keeping what he called dossiers on lanes of americans. -- on millions of americans. clapper and the nsa and ultimately led widen out of frustration to ask clapper that question publicly. last week he referred to a culture of misinformation in the intelligence committee by senior intelligence officials, clapper, alexander and othe
let's go back to march when senator ron wyden question james clapper about the nsa. >> does the nsa collect any type of data at all on millions or hundreds of millions of americans? >> no, sir. not. does >> not wittingly. there are cases where they could inadvertently perhaps collect, but not wittingly. >> that is what clapper said about the nsa in march. spencer ackerman, we have come a long way, or have we? where is this going right now? >> let's just back up....
105
105
Jun 18, 2013
06/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 105
favorite 0
quote 0
there was a whole panel, fbi, nsa, you name it. where is that sort of transparency on all these other things we've been talking about, benghazi for one, irs for another, dorj for another? is the failure to have those questions answered leading to a credibility problem. >> it's striking because this is a president whose campaigns were known for rapid response and these questions have been lingering for weeks on end without any real answers coming from the president or his team. on the nsa situation, the reason why it has blown up in this administration's face because it's coming to us in a bigger context of the severe abuse us of power doug points out. the irs, department of justice, benghazi. we don't have any kind of real answer from him and his team on those issues as well. the nsa issue may be able to stand on its own but coming in a broader context of abuse of power without any real answers from him. remember back in the day there used to be presidential primetime news conferences. why not have it? the reason he hasn't been pro
there was a whole panel, fbi, nsa, you name it. where is that sort of transparency on all these other things we've been talking about, benghazi for one, irs for another, dorj for another? is the failure to have those questions answered leading to a credibility problem. >> it's striking because this is a president whose campaigns were known for rapid response and these questions have been lingering for weeks on end without any real answers coming from the president or his team. on the nsa...
143
143
Jun 19, 2013
06/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 143
favorite 0
quote 0
speaking about the nsa current programs to monitor phone calls and on line activity. that speech set to get under way minutes from announcement we'll bring you development. fox news's napolitano says the current head of the nsa lied to congress during yesterday's intelligence hearing about whether the agency can listen to phone calls and read our emails. you're about to get three questions and answers. listen specifically and carefully to question no. two and answer number two and listen to the rest, then we'll talk. >> general alexander, is the nsa on private company's servers as defined under these two programs? >> we are not. >> is the nsa have the ability to listen to americans' phone calls or read their emails under these two programs? >> no, we do not have that authority. >> does the technology exist at the nsa to flip a switch by some analysts to listen to americans' he phone calls or read their emails? >> no. >> did you hear the second question? does it have the ability to listen or redreams. he said no, we do not have that authority. ability is one thing, aut
speaking about the nsa current programs to monitor phone calls and on line activity. that speech set to get under way minutes from announcement we'll bring you development. fox news's napolitano says the current head of the nsa lied to congress during yesterday's intelligence hearing about whether the agency can listen to phone calls and read our emails. you're about to get three questions and answers. listen specifically and carefully to question no. two and answer number two and listen to the...
75
75
Dec 17, 2013
12/13
by
KCSM
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
but again i love this way until tomorrow will be new nsa rattling. talk about rachel evans and mosman councils that brennan centers of liberty and national security program. thank you for coming on the shelf thinking of well the cbs news magazine program sixty minutes is under fire for the second time in many months for the reporting scandal this time the program is being criticized for a recent two part series that looks until the isi director keith alexander called sixty minutes to invite them into the agency for an unprecedented inside look at what the nsa does and what its officials think about the leaks from former contractor a what's not and now media critics argue that not a single dissenting voice was featured throughout the reporting two parts by twenty and no tough questions for ultimately it's our chief political commentator sensex analyzes the report is full for blowback. send in a sixty minutes report which noted unprecedented access to the nsa didn't start off so well. full disclosure i once worked in the office of the director of natio
but again i love this way until tomorrow will be new nsa rattling. talk about rachel evans and mosman councils that brennan centers of liberty and national security program. thank you for coming on the shelf thinking of well the cbs news magazine program sixty minutes is under fire for the second time in many months for the reporting scandal this time the program is being criticized for a recent two part series that looks until the isi director keith alexander called sixty minutes to invite...
54
54
Nov 3, 2013
11/13
by
KCSM
tv
eye 54
favorite 0
quote 0
since they have the technology and ability to do so well contrast this with the statement by the nsa chief keith alexander who said his agency is told by a policy makers who despite how alexander pointed out that us ambassadors were also among those ordering the snooping when mcgovern who worked as a c i a officer under center different us administration says that president obama really didn't know what the nsa was doing. it would raise many important questions. in many ways it's worse for obama not to have known coach who's running the show nowhere does the buck stop. so equally bad is that you read it. and now this guy filling and this really didn't care that the train. the nsa chief steward shown to be very fast and loose with the truth alexander for warren and then clap for you it was the head of the intelligence apparatus to us admitted to lying to the congress felony. that there is but a friend defend themselves but telling everyone that although personally i don't know whom to believe because both sides have been very sparing with the truth well in its search for the truth abo
since they have the technology and ability to do so well contrast this with the statement by the nsa chief keith alexander who said his agency is told by a policy makers who despite how alexander pointed out that us ambassadors were also among those ordering the snooping when mcgovern who worked as a c i a officer under center different us administration says that president obama really didn't know what the nsa was doing. it would raise many important questions. in many ways it's worse for...
69
69
Aug 6, 2013
08/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
let's start with the nsa. how widespread does the revelation show their surveillance programs are of u.s. citizens? >> i think it was a shock to everyone about what we learned from snowden's revelation. the nsa is collecting information on potentially every american. it is from telephone metadata. that is pretty much every call you have made. they store that data for five years. >> what happens to it after that? >> well, we do not really know. they say they can only store it for five years, so in theory, it has to be destroyed after that. another program we are learning about collected e-mail metadata. so they are doing e-mail, too. they say that ended in 2011. >> walk us through the metadata. what exactly is that? why is it important in this data collection program? >> when you are investigating terrorism, what you are looking for is not just individual people, but networks. if you found one person, you're interested and who else is working with them? you want to look at who they communicate with. this inform
let's start with the nsa. how widespread does the revelation show their surveillance programs are of u.s. citizens? >> i think it was a shock to everyone about what we learned from snowden's revelation. the nsa is collecting information on potentially every american. it is from telephone metadata. that is pretty much every call you have made. they store that data for five years. >> what happens to it after that? >> well, we do not really know. they say they can only store it...
151
151
Oct 29, 2013
10/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 151
favorite 0
quote 0
curbing the nsa, putting the brakes on that mass itch data collection system. >>> counting down to the winter olympics. sochi trying to get ready. >>> the head of the agency in charge of putting together president obama's health care law with the affordable health care website. >> i want to apologize to you that the website hasn't worked as well as it could. we know you need affordable coverage. we assure you that the website will be fixed. >> she had cmk the centers for medicare and medicaid services, the congress people continue to grill her, tavener says the issues should be fixed at the end of november. she is the first person to testify about the website and let's listen in. >> i'm not asking for incomes verification. if a person signs up were they offered credible employer insurance? because that's been delayed, you have to come up with a new verification tool to determine their eligibility for suns dis. if a person meets the qualifications they can't get credible insurance. >> that's correct sphwhrp if a a -- if a person is twif years old, they can get that subsidy but if they'r
curbing the nsa, putting the brakes on that mass itch data collection system. >>> counting down to the winter olympics. sochi trying to get ready. >>> the head of the agency in charge of putting together president obama's health care law with the affordable health care website. >> i want to apologize to you that the website hasn't worked as well as it could. we know you need affordable coverage. we assure you that the website will be fixed. >> she had cmk the...
54
54
Nov 16, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 54
favorite 0
quote 0
nsa because of the legal requirement under section 702 that nsa only target nonu.s. persons, nsa does the research necessary when they have a target to determine whether that person is a u.s. citizen. they need to make that determination. that's a very, very different process from saying we're going to look at all of the communications that are collected and we're going to evaluate every single party to every one o of those communications to determine whether or not that's a u.s. person. so they do have the ability to try to make the determination as to whether somebody is or is not a u.s. person. but that's a different proposition. >> i think in estimation, the method that is used in comparable circumstances before the fisa court, i'd like to add to the record two pieces of testimony to that to me sugs that the nsa could be able to estimate how many americans have had their information collected under foreign intelligence authorities. the first is from general alexander. he testified in september that the employees over a thousand mathematicians more than any other
nsa because of the legal requirement under section 702 that nsa only target nonu.s. persons, nsa does the research necessary when they have a target to determine whether that person is a u.s. citizen. they need to make that determination. that's a very, very different process from saying we're going to look at all of the communications that are collected and we're going to evaluate every single party to every one o of those communications to determine whether or not that's a u.s. person. so...
95
95
Jun 14, 2013
06/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
that is the job of the nsa. they were at the forefront of the electronic eavesdropping era and is at the forefront of the cyber warfare era. the first thing you have to do when you are doing cyber warfare is discover how their systems work. you do that by inserting different kinds of viruses and malware into their systems. we have 14,000 more people who are going to be working for general alexander now in cyber command. this is a serious command. you have an army, navy, air force under him. this is the real thing. nsa directory, keith alexander said the american people had been misinformed about the extent of the agency's surveillance. >> i have been working with this committee for the past several years. they are very good about asking all the questions and providing tremendous oversight, as does the court and administration. this is not a program where we are out for free-wheeling. it is a well-overseen and very focused program. what we owe you the american people is now, how good is that, with some statistics
that is the job of the nsa. they were at the forefront of the electronic eavesdropping era and is at the forefront of the cyber warfare era. the first thing you have to do when you are doing cyber warfare is discover how their systems work. you do that by inserting different kinds of viruses and malware into their systems. we have 14,000 more people who are going to be working for general alexander now in cyber command. this is a serious command. you have an army, navy, air force under him....
119
119
Jun 13, 2013
06/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 0
you feel the nsa has deceived? think we always have situations where people and government may not tell the whole truth, but that -- but that does not mean the bulk are not telling the truth. you had someone across aisle from me but we were both telling the truth and that some new people are doing a good job, and we cannot rush them all to say they are misrepresenting us in these issues. caller: good morning. i would like to start off by saying i feel like the nsa thing is just another way to change the u.s. and two more of a police state since they could not get it with banning the guns. that is how i feel. i feel it is another way to change the u.s. to a police state. guest: i can understand your concerns about that. every time we hear about these programs they do give us that concern. that is why i think we have to have balance. none of us want to move to the police state. we're all very concerned when received a growing technology and the ability people have to look into the record in privacy. it is not just th
you feel the nsa has deceived? think we always have situations where people and government may not tell the whole truth, but that -- but that does not mean the bulk are not telling the truth. you had someone across aisle from me but we were both telling the truth and that some new people are doing a good job, and we cannot rush them all to say they are misrepresenting us in these issues. caller: good morning. i would like to start off by saying i feel like the nsa thing is just another way to...
80
80
Nov 2, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
there is no content collected by the nsa. there are bits of data: location, telephone numbers that can be queried when there is reasonable, articulable suspicion. i so regret what is happening. i will do everything i can to prevent this program from being cancelled out. senator, i don't have any questions. >> it is ironic that not only is diane feinstein, who's a democrat, one of the most devoted apologists of the nsa, the position that she occupies in the senate, which is chair of the senate intelligence committee is the position that is supposed to be devoted to overseeing the intelligence community, serving as a watchdog over it, and yet they've managed to put and install into that position, one of the most slavish devotees and loyalist of all of their powers. >> the people who are the ones who are supposed to be watching the intelligence agencies are the ones who end up being their biggest supporters and to some extent, the ones who try to rationalize every form of misconduct that ever gets displayed to us. >> as more and
there is no content collected by the nsa. there are bits of data: location, telephone numbers that can be queried when there is reasonable, articulable suspicion. i so regret what is happening. i will do everything i can to prevent this program from being cancelled out. senator, i don't have any questions. >> it is ironic that not only is diane feinstein, who's a democrat, one of the most devoted apologists of the nsa, the position that she occupies in the senate, which is chair of the...
159
159
Jun 18, 2013
06/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 159
favorite 0
quote 0
that's nsa's charge. the first program executed under section 215 of the patriot act authorizes the collection of telephone metadata only. as you've heard before, the metadata is only the telephone numbers and contact, the time and date of the call and the duration of that call. this authority does not, therefore, allow the government to listen in on anyone's telephone call, even that of a terrorist. the information acquired under the court order from the telecommunications providers does not contain the content of any communications, what you're saying during the course of the conversation, the identities of the people that are talking or any cell phone locational information. as you also know, this program was specifically developed to allow the u.s. government to detect communications between terrorists operating outside the u.s. who are themselves communicating with potential operatives inside the u.s., a gap highlighted by the attacks of 9/11. the controls on the use of this data at nsa are specific,
that's nsa's charge. the first program executed under section 215 of the patriot act authorizes the collection of telephone metadata only. as you've heard before, the metadata is only the telephone numbers and contact, the time and date of the call and the duration of that call. this authority does not, therefore, allow the government to listen in on anyone's telephone call, even that of a terrorist. the information acquired under the court order from the telecommunications providers does not...
187
187
Nov 2, 2013
11/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 187
favorite 0
quote 0
so, look, here's the cia, i mean the nsa chief saying these things, the nsa spying on diplomats at the request of ambassadors. what do you say about that? rick? >> i have to agree. there are a lot of am pabassado around the world that really want to know what's happening from the other side the aisle so to speak. so there's a lot of requests that go back to agency personnel. the sip pell fact is the agency personnel is only responding to the policymakers. the politicians and others feel the pressure from those in the field who want the intelligence and they're the ones who are responding. they don't make the rules. if you want to change the rules, lobby congress or get congress, the congressional oversight committees, to be aggressive. >> the challenge came from james caru rosepep, a former u.s. ambassador to romania during the clinton administration, and he now a democratic state senator in maryland. during this exchange between the two, with general alexander, he was pressing the nsa chief to give a, quote, national security justification for the agency's surveillance for combating t
so, look, here's the cia, i mean the nsa chief saying these things, the nsa spying on diplomats at the request of ambassadors. what do you say about that? rick? >> i have to agree. there are a lot of am pabassado around the world that really want to know what's happening from the other side the aisle so to speak. so there's a lot of requests that go back to agency personnel. the sip pell fact is the agency personnel is only responding to the policymakers. the politicians and others feel...
115
115
Jun 12, 2013
06/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 115
favorite 0
quote 0
. >>> the top man at the nsa on the hot seat at capitol hill as the nsa leaker called hero and traitor claims he is neither and says his fate rests with the people of hong kong. this is "special report." >>> good evening, i am bret baier. he says he is not hiding from justice and will stay and fight in hong kong. edward snowden is talking again, and much of washington is still talking about what to do with it. meanwhile, one of the top people at the cia, deep in the benghazi scandal, is leaving. chief intelligence correspondent catherine herridge has the latest. good evening. >> reporter: deputy cia director mike morales resigning after 33 years with the agency. his decision was made some time ago. he was at the center of the talking bouts controversy. they blamed the cia for providing that information to then ambassador susan rice who blamed a demonstration spun out of control. on capitol hill today, the issue was security and whether domestic surveillance has gone too far. how the controversial data programs work, keith alexander offered numbers. >> dozens of terrorist events that th
. >>> the top man at the nsa on the hot seat at capitol hill as the nsa leaker called hero and traitor claims he is neither and says his fate rests with the people of hong kong. this is "special report." >>> good evening, i am bret baier. he says he is not hiding from justice and will stay and fight in hong kong. edward snowden is talking again, and much of washington is still talking about what to do with it. meanwhile, one of the top people at the cia, deep in the...
156
156
Jun 13, 2013
06/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 156
favorite 0
quote 0
the director of the nsa repeated his defense saying everything the nsa does is critical to american personal safety. >> we've got to work with congress and the administration to make sure that we balance security and civil liberties. from my perspective, what we can't just do is throw it out and then wish later that we had protected it. we have got to do this right, and that means being deliberate. we also want to be transparent. i think the president knows he made those statements, and it makes sense that the american people know what we're doing is right. bill: amen to. that he was credible, too. he defended his programs, but here's the question now, is our national security at serious risk? that's what he said. later this hour we'll talk to general jack keane and is there anything that can be done to repair the damage out there now. martha: here are some of the revelations from snowden so far, the 29-year-old who burst this program. he's disclosed the existence of prism, giving the nsa direct access to google, facebook and other internet giants. he also revealed documents showing the nsa
the director of the nsa repeated his defense saying everything the nsa does is critical to american personal safety. >> we've got to work with congress and the administration to make sure that we balance security and civil liberties. from my perspective, what we can't just do is throw it out and then wish later that we had protected it. we have got to do this right, and that means being deliberate. we also want to be transparent. i think the president knows he made those statements, and...
118
118
Oct 28, 2013
10/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 118
favorite 0
quote 1
has confidencet in general alexander and the leadership at the nsa and the rank-and-file at the nsa who do extraordinary work on behalf of every american citizen and on behalf of our allies, keeping them safe. the issues that are part of the review look at how we can better andnce our security needs the security needs of our allies against the real privacy concerns that we all share. top, thereted at the has been extraordinary change, technological change in the last 10, 20 years. the last 10 or so years since -- i mean, it has affected the whole world in the sense of how the world transfers information and that has brought about changes in the way that those in the world who want to do harm to americans and our allies operate. so, that has meant we have had to adapt. adapted, and as we adapt, we need to make sure -- the president is in sense and -- the president is insistent -- that we strike a balance that protects our security. >> the revolution of the eavesdropping has caused damage with our allies. when do you expect a review to be done and do you expect a scaling back of monitorin
has confidencet in general alexander and the leadership at the nsa and the rank-and-file at the nsa who do extraordinary work on behalf of every american citizen and on behalf of our allies, keeping them safe. the issues that are part of the review look at how we can better andnce our security needs the security needs of our allies against the real privacy concerns that we all share. top, thereted at the has been extraordinary change, technological change in the last 10, 20 years. the last 10...
91
91
Dec 18, 2013
12/13
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 91
favorite 0
quote 0
wiretapping is not just nsa. police, whichcal it sounds like it was in your case or it if they follow the law, they could argue they have done everything right. wiretapping has been a cornerstone of law enforcement since the invention of the telephone -- telephone. host: if they were doing their job as designed, why couldn't they stop the boston murders? a coordination problem. us had been more positives in september 11. interagency cooperation has gotten better, but there is still some gaps and that was one of them. host: what you make of the headlines of these tech company ceos meeting with the president yesterday and pressing him on spying, saying the public does not trust us, and demanding they have more control over the backbone? people are trying to manipulate the press and public opinion by releasing things that damage the u.s. government and damage u.s. companies. there are people trying to take commercial advantage of this and companies are hurting. this is something the president needs to pay attention
wiretapping is not just nsa. police, whichcal it sounds like it was in your case or it if they follow the law, they could argue they have done everything right. wiretapping has been a cornerstone of law enforcement since the invention of the telephone -- telephone. host: if they were doing their job as designed, why couldn't they stop the boston murders? a coordination problem. us had been more positives in september 11. interagency cooperation has gotten better, but there is still some gaps...
96
96
Jun 18, 2013
06/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 96
favorite 0
quote 0
nsa director, general keith alexander, claims the secret surveillance programs foiled terrorists and gave few specifics. under pressure from the left and the right, the president wants to disclose more. >> what i've asked the intelligence community to do is see how much of this we can declassify without further compromising the program. >>> the putin problem. russian leader blocks the g-8 summit leaders from demanding that syria's assad step down. >>> and just check out the body language when obama met putin. >> with respect to syria, we do have differing perspectives on the problem, but we share an interest in reducing the violence, securing chemical weapons. >> translator: of course our opinions do not coincide but all of us have the intention to stop the violence in syria. >> biden to the rescue. the vice president trying to keep hope alive for tougher gun laws. we'll bring you his report this hour live from the white house. >>> off to the races. senator claire mccaskill, one of obama's earliest supporters in 2008, now declares for hillary in 2016. but will hillary even decide to
nsa director, general keith alexander, claims the secret surveillance programs foiled terrorists and gave few specifics. under pressure from the left and the right, the president wants to disclose more. >> what i've asked the intelligence community to do is see how much of this we can declassify without further compromising the program. >>> the putin problem. russian leader blocks the g-8 summit leaders from demanding that syria's assad step down. >>> and just check out...
65
65
Jul 30, 2013
07/13
by
CNNW
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
we need outside auditing of what the nsa has been doing all these years. the nsa at present doesn't have someone who's not part of their overall program, examine whether they are complying with the content of information, unless we have some reasonable suspicion or otherwise, and why would we expect an agency to call its own people to account 37. >> in a letter to the justice department, you describe what your son did as civil disobedience. there are those who say, look, civil disobedience is accepting the ramifications of your actions of your decision, of taking the punishment, why do you see this as civil disobedience. >> first of all, i think he is accepting the consequences. you look at his 12 minute video, and what he said, he's not living a comfortable life at this point. he's an american, he knows his country. i know my son, i know he loves his country. what he believed is that this information, the american people needed to be aware of what their government was doing to them. spying upon them. >> i would interject on this issue of civil disobedienc
we need outside auditing of what the nsa has been doing all these years. the nsa at present doesn't have someone who's not part of their overall program, examine whether they are complying with the content of information, unless we have some reasonable suspicion or otherwise, and why would we expect an agency to call its own people to account 37. >> in a letter to the justice department, you describe what your son did as civil disobedience. there are those who say, look, civil...
87
87
Jun 18, 2013
06/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 87
favorite 0
quote 0
that's nsa's charge. the first program executed under section 215 of the patriot act -- >> in total we hear about four cases where officials say that terror plots were disrupted and michael isikoff remains with us and obviously we were talking about szazi before break. your reaction to the other three he talked about just now. >> details were pretty sketchy. so it is a little hard to evaluate based on the information that they have just supplied. i would note that general alexander, when he introduced shawn joyce from the fbi, he was very careful. he talked about how the programs contributed to the falling of these plots. he did not say that they were solely responsible for foiling the plots. so i think that's a little bit of a sort of walk back from statement we were hearing last week. it is important to note that basic nsa surveillance program that they are citing here, that the foreign terrorist e-mails and telephones overseas. and when they get information that they are in communication with somebody
that's nsa's charge. the first program executed under section 215 of the patriot act -- >> in total we hear about four cases where officials say that terror plots were disrupted and michael isikoff remains with us and obviously we were talking about szazi before break. your reaction to the other three he talked about just now. >> details were pretty sketchy. so it is a little hard to evaluate based on the information that they have just supplied. i would note that general alexander,...
84
84
Jul 2, 2013
07/13
by
CURRENT
tv
eye 84
favorite 0
quote 0
plus, he might have stuff that the nsa doesn't know. so the more he keeps that information to himself to just between he and putin and the russian government, the better it is, i think for putin. >> john: i think you're right. were you surprised by mr. putin's defense of america? did it seem that he was having it post both ways, taking advantage of snowden. >> it was a perfect two-fer. you get to look good in front of the american people, and you get to keep the secrets at the same time, and not let the chinese to get the secrets. for mr. putin it seems like a no-loss gain. >> john: well, some critics, as you know, say mr. snowden is a felon. others include speaker boehner an feinstein call him a traitor. the man who leaked the papers call him a whistle blower. at this point in this long process how do you evaluate what mr. snowden is doing? >> by leaking the fact that the nsa is secretly gathering everybody's phone records on a daily basis millions and millions of innocent people data mining them and storing them without anybody's know
plus, he might have stuff that the nsa doesn't know. so the more he keeps that information to himself to just between he and putin and the russian government, the better it is, i think for putin. >> john: i think you're right. were you surprised by mr. putin's defense of america? did it seem that he was having it post both ways, taking advantage of snowden. >> it was a perfect two-fer. you get to look good in front of the american people, and you get to keep the secrets at the same...
138
138
Jun 19, 2013
06/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 138
favorite 0
quote 0
the nsa cannot listen to your telephone calls and the nsa cannot target your emails. >> bill: president obama says the u.s. government is not reading private emails. the nsa whistleblower says they are. who do you believe? charles krauthammer will weigh in. >> in particular obviously a crucial way of reproducing whiteness, white supremacy, white privilege. >> bill: far left university of pennsylvania teacher says opposition to late term abortion is driven by white racism. incredible. we will show you what's going on. >> money for heroin. >> also tonight undercover reporter exposes fraud in 2 billion-dollar telephone entitlement. largely paid for by americans. this situation might shock you. >> people on drugs. they get this phone and they go get $40. >> caution, you are about to enter the no spin zone. the factor begins right now. ♪ hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. do you believe president obama? that is the subject of this evening's talking points memo. there is no question the president is in trouble. areasonable doubt doing in new cnn poll mr. obama's job rati
the nsa cannot listen to your telephone calls and the nsa cannot target your emails. >> bill: president obama says the u.s. government is not reading private emails. the nsa whistleblower says they are. who do you believe? charles krauthammer will weigh in. >> in particular obviously a crucial way of reproducing whiteness, white supremacy, white privilege. >> bill: far left university of pennsylvania teacher says opposition to late term abortion is driven by white racism....